Russia says won't back 'crippling' Iran sanctions

Moscow diplomat says his country will not work on measures that may be slapped on Islamic Republic's banking or energy sectors. 'What relation to non-proliferation is there in forbidding banking activities with Iran?' he asks

Addressing delay in delivery of S-300 missiles to Tehran, FM Lavrov says Moscow 'never takes any actions leading to the destabilization of this or that region.' Adds: Russia to Mideast Quartet meeting next month

"We are not got going to work on sanctions or measures which could lead to the political or economic or financial isolation of this country," Oleg Rozhkov, deputy director of the security affairs and disarmament department at Russia's Foreign Ministry, told reporters.

"What relation to non-proliferation is there in forbidding banking activities with Iran? This is a financial blockade. And oil and gas. These sanctions are aimed only at paralyzing the country and paralyzing the regime."

Iran has the world's second-largest crude oil reserves, but desperately needs investment to develop them. It denies working to develop a nuclear warhead but insists on its right to create nuclear power-generating capacity.

His government supports the Shite Hezbollah
militia in Lebanon,
which Israel fought in a 2006 war,
and the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas,
the target of Israel's December 2008-January 2009 offensive
to put a stop to rocket fire from militias in the Gaza Strip.